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1. Numbers, Sets, and Sequences
Rational Zeros Theorem. For polynomials of the form cnxn + … + c0 = 0 , where each coefficient is an integer, then the only rational solutions have the form where c divides cn and d divides c0; rational root r must divide c0.
The maximum of a set S is the largest element in the set.
The minimum is the smallest element in the set.
The of S is the greatest lower bound.
The of S is the smallest upper bound.
S is bounded if s S, sM for some M
Completeness Axiom. If S is a nonempty bounded set in , then S and S exist.
Archimedean Property. If a, b 0, then n such that na b.
A sequence (sn) is a function mapping from to . It converges to s if $\forall\epsilon\implies$ |(sn)-s| <
In other words, (sn) = s
Important limit theorems include:
(sn)(tn) = ((sn))((tn))
(sn)+(tn) = ((sn)) + ((tn))
($\frac{1}{n^p}) = 0 for p > 0
n(1/n) = 1
A subsequence (sn(k)) of (sn) is a sequence that is a subset of the elements in the original sequence with relative order preserved.
Bolzano-Weierstrass Theorem. Every bounded sequence has a convergent subsequence, having some subsequential limit.
Given any (sn) and let S be the set of subsequential limits of (sn). Define
(sn) = $\lim\(N→$\infin {(sn): n>N} = S